
Articles
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1 month ago |
abc.net.au | Andrew West |Nadyat El Gawley |Simon Branthwaite
The re-election of Donald Trump last November thrilled many on the right, especially nationalists wanting to adapt his America First ideology to their own countries. And some Christians looked past Trump’s personal history of multiple divorce and sexual scandal to suggest this was an age of religious rebirth. But for one of Britain’s leading conservatives, Donald Trump, and the United States itself, are poor role models for true conservatives.
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1 month ago |
abc.net.au | Andrew West |Nadyat El Gawley |Simon Branthwaite
Why are clergy regarded as office holders rather than staff? We speak to Reverend Chris Bedding, an Anglican priest and executive officer of the Faith Workers Alliance. 2025 is a jubilee year for the Catholic Church, traditionally a time for renewal and the forgiveness of debt and sin. But with Pope Francis still in recovery from double pneumonia, pilgrims are finding new ways to mark the jubilee. And why are Donald Trump and the United States itself poor role models for true conservatives.
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1 month ago |
abc.net.au | Andrew West |Nadyat El Gawley
2025 is a jubilee year for the Catholic Church, traditionally a time for renewal and the forgiveness of debt and sin. For millions of Catholics, it also brings an opportunity for a pilgrimage to Rome – and that would normally involve being part of a mass or public prayer led by the Pope. But with Pope Francis still in recovery from double pneumonia, pilgrims are finding new ways to mark the jubilee. Hermione Kitson reports from Rome.
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1 month ago |
abc.net.au | Andrew West |Nadyat El Gawley
Australia’s High Court recently upheld a long-standing law that says priests are not employees of their churches. They are “office holders”. So where does this leave the large majority of clergy, denied the rights of employees? The Reverend Chris Bedding is an Anglican priest in Perth and the Faith Workers Alliance executive officer.
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1 month ago |
abc.net.au | Andrew West |Hamish Camilleri |Nadyat El Gawley
A State Memorial Service will be held in Sydney this week for David Polson, one of the first people in Australia to contract HIV AIDS. David lived for 40 years after his initial diagnosis, developing a close friendship with one of his early carers, CLARE NOLAN from the Sisters of Charity. The Catholic nuns ran Ward 17 at St Vincent's Hospital, where they nursed hundreds of HIV AIDS patients. Sister Nolan remembered David Polson and the prejudice he and other patients encountered.
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